being tested. This ensures that we test the tools just built and not
some random tools that might happen to be in the user's PATH. This
makes LLVM testing much more stable and predictable.
llvm-svn: 122341
Some quad-register intrinsics with lane operands only take a double-register
operand for the vector containing the lane. The valid range of lane numbers
is then half as big as you would expect from the quad-register type.
Note: This currently has no effect because those intrinsics are now handled
entirely in the header file using __builtin_shufflevector, which does its own
range checking, but I want to use this for generating tests.
llvm-svn: 121867
registers that alias Reg, including itself. This is almost the same as the
existing getAliasSet() method, except for the inclusion of Reg.
The name matches the reflexive TRI::regsOverlap(x, y) relation.
It is very common to do stuff to a register and all its aliases:
stuff(Reg)
for (const unsigned *Alias = TRI->getAliasSet(Reg); *Alias; ++Alias)
stuff(*Alias);
That can now be written as the simpler:
for (const unsigned *Alias = TRI->getOverlaps(Reg); *Alias; ++Alias)
stuff(*Alias);
This change requires a bit more constant space for the alias lists because Reg
is included and because the empty alias list cannot be shared any longer.
If the getAliasSet method is eventually removed, this space can be reclaimed by
sharing overlap lists. For instance, %rax and %eax have identical overlap sets.
llvm-svn: 121800
instruction based on the t_addrmode_s# mode and what it returned. There is some
obvious badness to this. In particular, it's hard to do MC-encoding when the
instruction may change out from underneath you after the t_addrmode_s# variable
is finally resolved.
The solution is to revert a long-ago change that merged the reg/reg and reg/imm
versions. There is the addition of several new addressing modes. They no longer
have extraneous operands associated with them. I.e., if it's reg/reg we don't
have to have a dummy zero immediate tacked on to the SDNode.
There are some obvious cleanups here, which will happen shortly.
llvm-svn: 121747
Use the same COPY_TO_REGCLASS approach as for the 2-register *_sfp instructions.
This change made a big difference in the code generated for the
CodeGen/Thumb2/cross-rc-coalescing-2.ll test: The coalescer is still doing
a fine job, but some instructions that were previously moved outside the loop
are not moved now. It's using fewer VFP registers now, which is generally
a good thing, so I think the estimates for register pressure changed and that
affected the LICM behavior. Since that isn't obviously wrong, I've just
changed the test file. This completes the work for Radar 8711675.
llvm-svn: 121730
as a "long" direct branch. While the mnemonics are the same, they encode the branch offset differently, and
the Darwin assembler appears to prefer the "long" form for direct branches. Thus, in the name of bitwise
equivalence, provide encoding and fixup support for it.
llvm-svn: 121710
class A<bit a, bits<3> x, bits<3> y> {
bits<3> z;
let z = !if(a, x, y);
}
The variable z will get the value of x when 'a' is 1 and 'y' when a is '0'.
llvm-svn: 121666
Remove the previous header. I don't think we need to expose to end users
that we use TableGen to produce our version of arm_neon.h, and that header
was also using doubleslash comments which could be a problem when using it
in strict C89 compilations.
llvm-svn: 121390
particular, the immediate has 20-bits of value instead of 21. And bit 0 is '0'
always. Going through the BL fixup encoding was trashing the "bit 0 is '0'"
invariant.
Attempt to get the encoding at slightly more correct with this.
llvm-svn: 121336